Local groups seek clean up of Duke’s coal ash pollution across North Carolina

NCDENR COALPress Release from the Southern Environmental Law Center

For Immediate Release: Jan. 15, 2014

Contacts:
Kathleen Sullivan, SELC, 919-967-1450 or ksullivan@selcnc.org
Frank Holleman, SELC, 864- 979-9431 or fholleman@selcnc.org

Representing:
Matthew Starr, Upper Neuse Riverkeeper, 919-856-1180 or matthew@neuseriver.org
Christine Ellis, Winyah Rivers Foundation, 843-267-3161 or christine@winyahrivers.org
Kemp Burdette, Cape Fear River Watch, 910-762-5606 or kemp@cfrw.us
Dean Naujoks, Yadkin Riverkeeper, 336-837-7669 or dean@yadkinriverkeeper.org
Julie Mayfield, Western North Carolina Alliance, 828-258-8737 or Julie@wnca.org
Amy Adams, Appalachian Voices, 828-262-1500 or amy@appvoices.org
Donna Lisenby, Waterkeeper Alliance, 704-277-6055 or dlisenby@waterkeeper.org

Local groups seek clean up of Duke’s coal ash pollution across North Carolina

 CHAPEL HILL, N.C.—The Southern Environmental Law Center today filed motions to allow seven local conservation groups to participate in state court enforcement actions against Duke Energy’s illegal coal ash pollution of lakes, rivers, and groundwater supplying drinking water for individual families and local communities throughout North Carolina.  The motion was filed on behalf of groups dedicated to protecting public waters across North Carolina, from the Broad River in the west to the Cape Fear at the coast.

“Duke’s coal ash pollution is threatening rivers, lakes, and drinking water in every part of North Carolina,” said Frank Holleman, senior attorney at the Southern Environmental Law Center. “Local groups from around the state have come together to help ensure that the state and Duke Energy take meaningful action to clean up Duke’s illegal coal ash pollution across North Carolina.”

The Neuse Riverkeeper Foundation, the Yadkin Riverkeeper, Cape Fear River Watch, Appalachian Voices, Western North Carolina Alliance, the Winyah Rivers Foundation, and Waterkeeper Alliance seek to stop and clean up unpermitted streams of contaminated surface water discharging from many of Duke’s coal ash lagoons, as well as persistent groundwater pollution leaching from these unlined impoundments.

For example, the Lee facility on the banks of the Neuse River near Goldsboro has groundwater concentrations of arsenic as high as 665 parts per billion, more than 60 times the North Carolina standard, near neighboring residential areas. Other sites have a long legacy of illegal, unpermitted coal ash discharges: at Belews Lake, selenium from coal ash killed off nearly all the lake’s fish in the 1980s, and problems persist today.

“With DENR’s declared mission of ‘customer service’ to its polluter-permittees, groups like ours that are dedicated to protecting our lakes and rivers for recreation and drinking water need a voice in this process,” said Yadkin Riverkeeper Dean Naujoks.

Last year, the North Carolina Department of the Environment and Natural Resources filed enforcement actions against Duke for its coal ash pollution at its Asheville and Riverbend facilities after local conservation groups announced their intent to take private legal action.  When conservation groups sent another notice of intent to sue over pollution at the Sutton facility near Wilmington, DENR filed its own actions for Duke’s other 12 coal ash sites around North Carolina.

DENR and Duke proposed a settlement of the Asheville and Riverbend cases that does not require Duke to clean up its coal ash pollution, and almost 5,000 citizens and organizations submitted comments opposed to the settlement.  The court has not yet decided whether to accept the proposed settlement.

“South Carolina is busy cleaning up its coal ash problem – it’s time for North Carolina to catch up,” said Christine Ellis of the Winyah Rivers Foundation.

The Winyah Rivers Foundation, represented by the Southern Environmental Law Center, recently obtained a settlement under which South Carolina utility Santee Cooper will remove all of its coal ash from unlined lagoons on the banks of the Waccamaw River. Facing similar liability at two other coal ash sites, the utility announced plans to remove all its coal ash from those sites as well, for a total of 11 million tons of coal ash to be recycled or moved to dry storage in lined landfills.  An earlier suit by Charlotte’s Catawba Riverkeeper Foundation resulted in the cleanup of 2.4 million tons of coal ash by South Carolina utility SCE&G.

The North Carolina court has previously allowed other groups to intervene with respect to Duke’s coal ash sites on Mountain Island Lake, north of Charlotte; on Lakes Wylie and Norman along the Catawba River; Duke’s Asheville site; and its Sutton site near Wilmington on the Cape Fear River.  Today’s intervention motion asks for the same action for additional sites represented by the seven conservation groups.  Those additional facilities are: Buck, on High Rock Lake near Salisbury; Cliffside, on the Broad River near Shelby; Weatherspoon, on the Lumber River near Lumberton; Lee, on the Upper Neuse River north of Goldsboro; Cape Fear, on the Cape Fear River south of Jordan Lake in Chatham County; and Belews Creek on Belews Lake near Winston-Salem.

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About the Southern Environmental Law Center

The Southern Environmental Law Center is a regional nonprofit using the power of the law to protect the health and environment of the Southeast (Virginia, Tennessee, North and South Carolina, Georgia, and Alabama). Founded in 1986, SELC’s team of nearly 60 legal and policy experts represent more than 100 partner groups on issues of climate change and energy, air and water quality, forests, the coast and wetlands, transportation, and land use. www.SouthernEnvironment.org

About the Neuse Riverkeeper Foundation

Neuse RIVERKEEPER® Foundation protects, restores and preserves the Neuse River basin through education, advocacy and enforcement, in order to provide clean water for drinking, recreation and enjoyment to the communities that it serves.

About the Yadkin Riverkeeper

Yadkin Riverkeeper’s mission is to respect, protect and improve the Yadkin Pee Dee River Basin through education, advocacy and action. It is aimed at creating a clean and healthy river that sustains life and is cherished by its people. To achieve this vision, it seeks to accomplish the following objectives: sustain a RIVERKEEPER® program, measurably improve water quality, reestablish native bio-diversity, preserve and enhance the forest canopy, bring legal action to enforce state and federal environmental laws, and teach and practice a “river ethic” of ecological respect to all ages. For more information, visit YadkinRiverkeeper.org or call 336-722-4949.

About Western North Carolina Alliance

For more than 30 years, the Western North Carolina Alliance has been a trusted community partner, marshalling grassroots support to keep our forests healthy, our air and water clean, and our communities vibrant.www.WNCA.org

About Cape Fear River Watch

Founded in 1993, Cape Fear River Watch works to protect and improve the water quality of the Lower Cape Fear River Basin through education, advocacy, and action.

About the Winyah Rivers Foundation

The Winyah Rivers Foundation is a non-profit environmental organization whose mission is to protect, preserve, monitor and revitalize the health of the lands and waters of the greater Winyah Bay watershed. Our goal is to protect our community’s right to fishable, swimmable and drinkable water. We pursue this goal through education and advocacy programs in support of our mission to protect our river resources. These programs are developed and implemented to increase the scientific literacy of our community, including local decision makers, and to engage them in environmental stewardship and planning for river resource protections.

About Appalachian Voices

Appalachian Voices is an award-winning, environmental nonprofit organization committed to protecting the natural resources of central and southern Appalachia, focusing on reducing coal’s impact on the region and advancing our vision for a cleaner energy future. Founded in 1997, we are headquartered in Boone, N.C. with offices in Charlottesville, Va.; Knoxville, Tn. and Washington, D.C. www.AppalachianVoices.org

About the Waterkeeper Alliance

Founded in 1999 by environmental attorney and activist Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. and several veteran Waterkeeper Organizations, Waterkeeper Alliance is a global movement of on-the-water advocates who patrol and protect over 100,000 miles of rivers, streams and coastlines in North and South America, Europe, Australia, Asia and Africa.

 

 

 

Jan. 23: WNCA’s Mayfield to take part in ECO public legislative forum

From ECO:

The Environmental and Conservation Organization will host a public forum at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 23 at the City Operations Center, 305 Williams St., in Hendersonville, to focus on North Carolina’s roll back of environmental protections.

According to a news release from ECO, some of the issues of concern include new billboard rules that could seriously damage the area’s tree canopy; new laws that delay energy efficiency standards, which could result in a substandard housing stock; and recent acts by the General Assembly to remove Asheville’s control over its water system.

According to DJ Gerken, senior attorney at the Southern Environmental Law Center and one of the forum’s presenters, “North Carolina has thrived (for decades) under laws that fostered both a healthy environment and vibrant economy– but in the past several years the legislature has set about dismantling those laws under the false premise that we have to choose between jobs and the environment.”

Gerken will be joined by Chuck McGrady, N.C. House of Representatives, and co-director Julie Mayfield of the Western North Carolina Alliance. Each panelist will speak individually on their understanding of the bills, as well as the long-term implications of the legislation.

Discussion will specifically cover HB 74 (Regulatory Reform Act of 2013), HB 120 (Building Codes: Local Consistency/Exempt Code), and HB 488 (Regionalization of Public Utilities).

Call ECO at 828-692-0385 or visit www.eco-wnc.org for more information.

AC-T: N.C. Wildlife Commission holds WNC public hearing on rule changes Jan. 14

Jan. 10, Asheville Citizen-Times:

As happens each year, the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission proposes changes to its fishing, hunting and trapping rules across the state, and conducts public hearings to let people know what the proposals are and answer any questions.

The public hearing for District 9 in Western North Carolina on proposed changes to the state’s wildlife management, game lands and fishing regulations, will  be Tuesday, Jan. 14, in Murphy.black bear web

The public hearing, which begins at 7 p.m., will be held in the Enloe Multi-purpose Room at Tri-County Community College.  The Wildlife Resources Commission also has scheduled a staff presentation 30 minutes before the hearing to discuss statewide black bear management objectives.

The 6:30 p.m. presentation and discussion will give background information about rule proposals that further objectives in the North Carolina Black Bear Management Plan, 2012-2022. The plan assists the Wildlife Commission in managing bear hunting to maintain healthy bear populations consistent with habitat where bears occur, and balancing the consideration of stakeholders.

Other hunting proposals make changes to the Western Archery Deer Season, and adjust regulations for black powder firearms and crossbows.

Of interest to anglers is a statewide proposed regulation that encourages private landowners to allow public angler access to inland fishing waters through their property under an agreement with the Commission.  The proposal provides landowners the ability to prescribe allowable activities on their property.  Each area will be clearly marked with signs identifying activities allowed.

Another statewide proposed fishing regulation will provide anglers the option to label trotlines, set hooks and jug hooks with their names and addresses or with their WRC customer numbers.  Allowing anglers to use their WRC customer numbers will help protect privacy by limiting the personal information required on the labels.

The “Public Hearings Applying to 2014-2015 Fishing, Hunting and Trapping Seasons” booklet, which provides a detailed list of all 42 proposed regulations, along with a comment form, is available online at www.ncwildlife.org.